Four governors from
Colombia have charged that American-supported aerial spraying of coca
crops is jeopardizing the health and food supply of small-scale farmers,
according to a New York Times article.

The United States
is providing the Pastrana government with nearly $1 billion in mostly
military aid for the aggressive assault on coca-growing regions that are
dominated by leftist rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
or right-wing parliamentary groups, is training three army battalions
to protect the spray planes against rebels, and is furnishing combat helicopters
and even some pilots for the task.

"Fumigation is
not the solution," said Mr. Ivan Gerardo Guerrero, governor of Putumayo
Province, which produces 60 percent of the nation's coca, who spoke for
his fellow governors from the states of Narino, Cauca and Tolima. "It
has a great defect. It doesn't really take into account the human being.
All it cares about are satellite pictures." He added that intensified
herbicide spraying might unintentionally drive the poorest farmers into
the arms of drug traffickers by ruining their food crops and alienating
them from their national government.